articleAug 7, 2015Closed access

Inferring Networks of Substitutable and Complementary Products

UC San Diego Health System · Stanford University

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

To design a useful recommender system, it is important to understand how products relate to each other. For example, while a user is browsing mobile phones, it might make sense to recommend other phones, but once they buy a phone, we might instead want to recommend batteries, cases, or chargers. In economics, these two types of recommendations are referred to as substitutes and complements: substitutes are products that can be purchased instead of each other, while complements are products that can be purchased in addition to each other. Such relationships are essential as they help us to identify items that are relevant to a user's search.

Citation impact

620
total citations
FWCI
198.62
Percentile
100%
References
38
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Computer science
  • Recommender system
  • Phone
  • Mobile phone
  • World Wide Web
  • Telecommunications
No related works found for this paper.